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About
LSYF/OA Lighthouse Sanctuary Youth Foundation,
Inc 1426 webgin house rd lawrenceville, Ga. 30045.
770.736.6890
In addition to these
articles, Rocky has been featured in the Atlanta Business
Chronicle June 19, 1991, Southern Jewelry News
October 1990, Atlanta Metro Magazine Dec 1991. He has
been filmed and featured on AtlantaCity Cable 5, The
Watchman On The Wall, the 700Club Filmed Oct 16
1997, Cable Vision/GNET (Two shows on The LSYF Youth
Ministry). .Rocky has appeared on numerous Radio Shows,
including the Barbara Dooley Show, Wife Of Legendary Coach
Vince Dooley and Georgia's Top Awarded TalkShow. and was key
speaker at the 1999 Church Of God Annual Resurrection
Breakfast.
The Renown Barbara Dooley Show Quotes By National Leaders and
Others
http://youthofamerica.com/baffa.html
Re: Joseph BAFFA, Ciro,
Calabria, Italy
Joseph, Carmine, Patrick, Angelo, Thomasso,
Thomas, Edward, Angela, Richard, Cookie, Paulo, Paul
BAFFA from Calabria, Baffa origin before 15th century was
Albania. Family founded Frascineto-Cosenza - Italy, c. 1500
ad. Brazil and Argentina have many descends of the Baffas
immigrants who came in the XIX century.
Quotes
Rock
Baffa-Scarfone House of
Cards: The Curse of Alphonso Books on
Baffa/Scarfone Research
http://www.youthofamerica.com/Page1.html
About RJ. Rocky
Scarfone:
I was born Joseph
Baffa in 1953 with club feet and twisted legs. All of the
doctors and castes and braces did little to improve my outlook
on life--or, for that matter, enable me to walk! I would not
walk until I was five, and by eight, I would lose my father to
a Mafia "Hit". My family would be forced to live in a NYC
housing projects (a devastating change from the serene
neighborhood I had grown up in). By eleven, I had had enough
and ran away on a seven year journey in quest of identity and
purpose . . .
My first
journey would begin in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania
and end in an adult psychiatric ward in Belvue hospital at
eleven years of age. Three months of terrible abuse and I was
once more free--free to live in
white and black checkered hallways that dotted my lonely
landscape like the craters of a cold and dusty moonscape.
Soon, I was running
with a group of "Wiseguys" in an effort to survive and
belong. But, even while I "hung out"
with "the crew", I found time to teach myself how to
read and write--then read every book I could lay my hands
on!
When my book and
"street" knowledge congealed into a mass of opposing views,
too large for my immature emotions, I dug an abyss deep in my
mind and tossed the file in. Soon I would find myself
teetering on its brink; my questions drowning in a storm of
hectic thought--inventing answers when I could not find any.
It was not long before I was returned to a reform school at
twelve years of age.
It was after this
experience that I would discover the truth about my father and
his death; the awesome truth of my family's history and the
fact that I seemed doomed to a life of crime and
death--as had four generations of manly ancestors before me! I
would leave NYC and travel the width and length of this
country searching; seeking; experiencing.
From then on it was a
constant battle between survival and my desperate desire to be
someone, to make it, to discover family and love. But I could
never totally recover from those years of abuse and suffering,
not until I found Jesus Christ at 40 years of age!
My
Journey
Throughout this
journey, my battles would be fought on many fields, among the
many peoples that lived and conducted their own battles in
this great nation. From Native-Americans in New Mexico, to
Baptists in Georgia; from an interracial family in Miami to a
Cult in California---I would become a heroin addict at
thirteen; a cat burglar at fourteen; a member of the Outlaw
Motorcycle gang; a disciple of Ra Lum Nah; a driver for a
"Bonnie and Clyde gang of the sixties---I would be rescued;
kidnapped; nearly raped; I would become an Agnostic; a Moslem;
a Hippy; a Buddhist I would learn Mafia skills as
well as street skills . . .
Yes, I would live
many lives in many lives before I would reach the point of
complete freedom and understanding! Yes, I was a reptilian
master of change. From personalities and names to people and
places, my endeavors were my key and not my humanity!
SEE: BOOKS
PUBLISHED BY M.A.G.I.C.
Accomplishments:
A Self-Educated /
Self-Taught individual, my accomplishments would eventualy
include: Sales & Marketing (Sub-Divisional Director by
nineteen!)-Master Mechanic/Shop Owner (10,000 sq. ft.) -
Nursery / Landscape / Horticulture / Bonsai (18 acres)
--Woodworker / Master Carver (500 custom jobs )-- Jeweler /
Master Goldsmith / Gemologist (over 11,500 sq ft of shops
w/400 individuals, TV show, 15 major features, clients incl..:
Sylvester Stallone; Bob Beamon; Bob Lee ...) -- Award Winning
Author / Poet / Artist.
My self-taught
reading skills would produce an abundance of book knowledge
which straddles a wide spectrum of thought (History, Political
Science, Psychology, Religion, The Arts, and Law are a few of
the subjects I have studied and enjoy).
Yes, my friend, I can
brag! And all with a fifth grade education, a "quickie" GED
test, and a spring/summer semester at Miami Dade Community
College--and JESUS CHRIST
AS MY GUIDE!
Rocky has been featured in the Atlanta
Business Chronicle June 19, 1991, Atlana
Journal Constitution (two major features), Gwinnett Daily
Post, , Southern Jewelry News October 1990,
Atlanta Metro Magazine
Dec 1991. He has been filmed and
featured on Atlanta City Cable
5, The Watchman On The Wall (a complete 3 part expose on Organized
Crime In North Carolina, Strip Clubs and a police officer whom
was gunned down in a hit and two shows on LSYF), the 700
Club Filmed Oct 16 1997,
Cable Vision/GNET (Two shows
on The LSYF Youth Ministry). Rocky has appeared on numerous
Radio Shows, including the Barbara Dooley Show, Wife Of
Legendary Couch Vince Dooley and Georgia's Top
Awarded Talk Show.
Further
Information/Bio Quotes By National
Leaders
Quotes From The Rock
" . . . a rapid
increase in violent youth crime will soon become fact due to
the availability of drugs and guns in our society. And, in
twenty or so years, when these youth have matured on the
streets and in the prisons (which will surely be society's
answer to this phenomena), society will then have realized
this fact of truth--but then it will be to late for
substantial programs to alter a trend which will, by then,
have become life . . ." (An article by Rocky Scarfone, @
1986)
". . . Yes, a
poignant tale that has become anything but a tale to those
whom have had their lives infected without rationalization!
Imagine, we hear how much we need to alleviate the syndrome,
yet wait for the magic cure--as cryptic as it is! You see, it
seems only when a gruesome event occurs that the full effects
of youth, drugs, violence, and crime hits home--or when
it involves a family whom cares and gives and participates in
the social ladder: 'Being one not of the welfare rolls!'
Yes, sorry to say,
when no one can shout: 'I Told You So! It's Them Folks Who
Don't Care None!' "
"A family is hit hard
each and every moment of reality--no matter the circumstances!
And yes, hearts do ache for those fathers and mothers and
siblings whom are caring . . . and also for those whom are
not! For we care just as much--if not more--for all those
youth whom have been smitten when we hear tell of the facts!
That is when the "problem" (should be called epidemic!) seems
greater then the cure . . .
. . .'cause, for the
youth whom is effected, it makes no how how much or where
their family sit at the table of humanity! "
"Yes, poverty lacks
nil to non-exclusivity when drugs, violence, abuse or
loneliness are concerned. When one becomes subjugate to having
a loved one lost upon the streets of desire, you can
recognize the desperation in their actions. Families or
individuals become infected with hope, fear and joy-- all
at once: 'the hope of cure; the fear of knowing it will not
work; and the joy of thinking what if !' . . .
. . . effecting,
infecting and affecting any and all!
. . . entire families
falling to pieces in their desperation for answers and
assistance . . . even their friends and neighbors become
affected!"
"We all have a
tremendous gift of communication to share. Including our own
desires, faults, mistakes and dreams! I have seen
Youth soak up every word tell of experience. Yes, and the
host of message beneath the surface! Hardship can become your
Gift; tremendous, life moving/changing
Gifts can only be acquired through difficult
circumstance! Yes, gifts whose harsh beginnings may have been
but their birth. . .
. . . are you
sharing your gifts so others may not have to journey through
the same hardship?
FEATURE
ARTICLES top
Rocky
Past Turns To Gold Gwinnett
Post Atlanta
Journal Constitution Feature "O Georgia!" Award
ROCKY PAST
TURNS TO GOLD: Self-taught artisan
gladly trains others
R.J. "Rocky" Scarfone spent his childhood on the
rough streets of [Queens!] Benson Hurst in Brooklyn.
Fatherless since he was 6 years old, he left home,
first at age 11. And, like a Charles Dickens character, Mr.
Scarfone scrambled about on his own, making a living
from odd jobs and his wits.
An apparent quick study,
he taught himself a variety of skills, including leather work,
auto repair, goldsmithing and jewelry making.
Though
his schooling stopped at fifth grade, he learned to read well
enough to pass the high school equivalency exam. He joined the
Marines and served six years.
A wish to teach skills,
in part, is the force behind his cooperative apprenticeship
program that has taught goldsmithing and jewelry making to
dozens of Atlantans for over four years.
A business
canopy
Mr. Scarfone, 37, is proprietor of
Highland Goldsmiths, which encompasses a host of activities,
including jewelry making, a licensed pawn shop, a mobile
jewelry repair truck, a jewelry showroom and, starting this
weekend, a jewelry stall at Buford Flea Market.
Originally on North Highland Avenue, Mr. Scarfone
now houses his operation in a sprawling 11,000-square-foot
commercial space at 451 Bishop St., where he and his wife,
Denise, also live.
Living "over the store" suits Mr.
Scarfone fine, proud of the clubby feel of his
quarters.
The apprentices hover about as he teaches
skills such as molding and even stone-cutting.
Cooperation fills the air. Bobby Stroud, who has good
skills, encourages Thea Taylor, who has been with the program
six months.
Other students gather about to encourage a
fellow student beaming over her creation.
Working
students
While many students are artistic enough to
create designs, their training equips them to employ thousands
of patterns to mold rings, bracelets necklaces and other
pieces.
Mr. Scarfone, a bejeweled director,
shouts orders to five or six people a minute.
His
students from various backgrounds, are male and female, black
and white. They typically hold down a full-time job.
Barbara DeLong, a north Atlanta empty nester, learned
about the program as a customer. William "Big Man" Smith is a
salesman. Others, like Cathy Byers and Michael Lane, enroll as
a couple.
The fee paid by the apprentices, $2,000 in
lump sum or installments, covers equipment, such as a
workbench and tools, which they own and take with them when
they leave. Their yearlong training is free.
As
members of the cooperative, the 85 or so apprentices help make
custom jewelry and staff the showroom, doing much of the
selling. They retain a percentage of the revenue from pieces
they sell. Most pursue jewelry making part time after their
apprenticeship.
Although he now cultivates the
cooperative idea, Mr. Scarfone admits that he started
it originally to get reliable help.
Now the operation
has a life of its own.
"I love the atmosphere here,"
said Mr. Stroud, 25, who has become a good appraiser, as well
as a jewelry maker.
Ernest Holsendolph's column
appears every Sunday, Wednesday and Friday.
Copyright
1993, The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, All rights
reserved.
Myth of heroism
The
Dave Kindred column "A right way to do wrong" lauded "The Bug"
numbers game operator Wesley Merrit as a hero who did no real
wrong. The idea that these kind of men were community leaders
is a fallacy that has perpetuated much of the evil that began
our society' s demise into drugs, gambling and political
bribery. Organized crime has had its hands in the till of
every neighborhood racket a including the numbers rackets of
Atlanta's African-American community. Organized crime used the
massive profits to finance every sort of evil degradation
known to man. Men such as Merrit contributed to the continuity
of organized crime.
It is articles such as this that
bolster the view of many of our youth that crime pays.
Scarfone is the author of a nonfiction book about
mobsters, due out in February. He lives in
Lawrenceville.
TOP GWINNETT DAILY Post SATURDAY,
JANUARY 25, 1997 HOUSE OF
CARDS: THE CURSE OF ALPHONSO
By Sarah Fischer Lifestyle Editor
Rocky Scarfone considers himself amessenger. Sometimes,
Scarfone hops on his Honda 750 to visit an Atlanta housing
project. Other days, he can be found giving his testimony
before metro Atlanta church members. Four years ago, Scarfone
spoke to teenagers at a Duluth school about having goals. He
shows off his full-arm tattoos to get their attention Wherever
his destination, though, the Lawrenceville man delivers a
powerful theme
"The message is that Jesus Christ is
all-powerful," he said. "God gives you the power to accomplish
anything you put your mind to, when you ask him for his
help."
Scarfone should know. The road for the
43-year-old has been, well, rocky.
Yet, from his father’s murder at the hands of the
Mafia when Scarfone was a child, to life on the streets, to
the great leap of selling his multi-million dollar companies
to start a youth foundation, the New York native has proven
that faith can, indeed, move mountains.
When you have Christ in your heart, you
still have the struggles, but you can recognize them and
overcome them with his help," he said.
Scarfone has experienced much, so much,
in fact, that he could write a book -- which is just what he
did three years ago.
His biography, "House of Cards, The Curse
of Alphonso." is scheduled to be released Feb 25. The 400-page
book, published by M A G I.C Publishing of Atlanta in
conjunction with Books International of Norcross, chronicles
Scarfone’s family, five generations of Mafia soldiers
beginning with his great-great grandfather, Alphonso
Dicanio.
Dicanio, who came to the United States
from Naples in 1908, worked as a laborer but later joined The
Black Hand, the predecessor of the Mafia Initially, 50,000
copies of "House of Cards" will be sold at area
bookstores
"The curse is that Alphonso swore
allegiance to an evil brigade’ Scarfone said. "The curse
caused the family to be like a
House of cards,
‘where the slightest breeze could destroy it. There was no
strength, no peace, no happiness."
The writer’s spirituality comes across as
much in the book as in his everyday conversation. Bouncing his
new baby daughter on his knee, it is apparent Scarfone has
achieved the inner peace to reflect on the world of his youth,
a world where fathers died leaving their children to fend for
themselves and their widows resorting to everything from
menial labor to shoplifting to survive.
At the age of 5, Scarfone said, he
discovered a personal relationship with God. Through prayer,
he said, he was able to heal the club foot condition he was
born with and learn to walk In 1961, when Scarfone was eight,
his father, Joseph, was murdered in a gangland hit, "thrusting
my family into a world of poverty, sorrow, grief and
degradation," he said
When he was 11, Scarfone ran away from
home. Upon his return, social workers took him for three days
of psychiatric evaluation. Those three days became a horrific
three months in the adult ward of Belvue hospital--which he
believes was orchestrated by the Mafia. From there began an
odyssey, which included Scarfone’s living on the streets in
abandoned apartments, running with a gang of streetwise kids,
staying in juvenile detention centers, even infiltrating the 7
Mafia to learn the details of his father’s death.
See CARDS, Page GB

6B GWINNETT DAILY Post SATURDAY,
JANUARY 25, 1997 TOP
Cards
Writer touts books as saga of
spirituality, tale of Good and Evil~
· From Page lB
All throughout
his teen years, Scarfone traveled the country, from a Navajo
reservation to a Miami housing project in a quest for purpose.
After a stint in the Armed Forces, he received an honorable
discharged attended an honors English program at Miami-Dade
Community College.
Still later, Scarfone would start some 15
companies, becoming experienced in wood work, landscaping,
sales and marketing and mechanics, to name a few of his
professions. But the self-made businessman still felt he had
not fulfilled God’s plan for his life.
In 1986, a turning point came when his
mother, Jeanette, died of cancer. "I had been used to death,
but her death was an awakening," Scarfone said. "I had blamed
her and my family for my poverty and loneliness. But when she
died, it was like coming back to my roots. I came face to face
with the truth that she loved me and that it wasn’t her fault.
At her deathbed, it was the first time I had looked in her
eyes since I was 11, and we forgave each other. Her death
awakened God’s anointing in me."
The next year, Scarfone met his future
wife, Denise Rogers, who encouraged him to write a book about
his life. "God sent her to me, and she never gave up. She saw
that spark within me," he .said
After marrying and moving to Atlanta, the
couple opened an 11000 square foot jewelry business, Highland
Goldsmiths in Buckhead. Scarfone also ran a boxing gym and
jewelry school. Yet, he still did not feel satisfied. "I knew
I had a purpose to fulfill, and that I had an anointing. So I
started talking about my story," he said.
The breakthrough came one day in 1993,
when Scarfone decided, "I had to write my book and preach the
word of God:’
"As I walked through the door, I wanted
to use the education that God had given me to assist other
youth in need," he said. "I gave my business away to friends
and acquaintances — I took only enough to support my family. I
had known the power of God, but that day I went with the full
faith:’
Soon after that, Scarfone began the trek
to put his testimony in print. he had never written a
sentence; in fact, he had only completed school through the
fifth grade. But Scarfone earned what he calls a "street
degree" and is an avid reader of history and religion. "House
of Cards" took him six months to write, with the words easily
flowing onto the page In fact, a yet-to-be published sequel
also has been completed. Prayer helped, Scarfone
said,
"Prayer is a relationship I know him
now:’ he said "When I wasn’t writing for six hours. I was
reading the Bible (Scarfone owns seven Bibles) When I write
the words fly:’
Already, the manuscript has garnered
praise from people such as Jan Crouch, vice president and
co-founder of Trinity Broadcasting Network, and Jay Walton of
the Old Rugged Cross Press. Excerpts from the book, which
includes poems written by Scarfone, have been featured in "A
Sea of Treasures," an anthology of poetry. and garnered the
author the 1996 "0 Georgia’ writer’s award.
Besides being his
life’s story, 'House of Cards’ is saga of spirituality, a tale
of good and evil.'' Scarfone said. "The demon controls the
Mafia. That is the dark side of life, where we have sorrow and
degradation. Then, we have the other side, which is love.
There is spiritual warfare in our world," he said.
The rooms where Scarfone writes provide a
glimpse into the author’s many interests. A pet iguana lounges
in a cage alongside bonsai trees which Scarfone has grown.
Framed letters from everyone from Sylvester Stallone to
President Bill Clinton share wall space with his writing
awards..
Sitting on a sofa near the where her
husband works, Denise Scarfone, an interior designer, is
obviously proud.
"I think the book has been his lifelong
dream, something he has always wanted to do," she said.
Denise, who shares his religious faith, also is supporting
Scarfone in his latest venture. In August he formed The
Lighthouse Sanctuary For Youth Foundation. The non-profit
organization plans to use part of the proceeds from the sale
of his book to fund youth programs. Scarfone is offering a
series of free motivational workshops, both secular and
non-secular, to churches, civic groups and
schools.
"I’ve always told him he should work with
young people," Denise said. "They are attracted by the way he
is He has high energy. When he wants something, he goes for
it. Also, he’s very good a t talking to them and deciphering
what their problems are. Whether drugs or whatever, he listens
to them."
The plans for Lighthouse sanctuary
include exposing youth to business/marketing operations,
spiritual lessons and hands on experience and offering them
encouragement and self-esteem. Scarfone wants to provide
24-hour safe space and alternative programs for young people.
Clinics will cover such topics as drug abuse, physical abuse,
team work versus individualism and reading and success. For
more information on the Lighthouse Sanctuary For Youth
Foundation, call 770-736-6890
"I want to use my story to reach young
people, and the hearts of adults so they can understand the
problems of children," Scarfone said. "My ministry is for
youth, which is the number one concern of Jesus Christ today.
We’re not doing enough for the young people:’
Clearly, Scarfone’s life is no longer a
house of cards. His travels ended two years ago, when he and
Denise moved to Lawrenceville, her childhood home. Eight
generations of his wife’s family have lived in the Five Forks
Trickum Road area since the late 1800s. "I stepped foot on
this soil, and I knew I was home," he said of the 10-acre
site.
Scarfone’s pride and joy, the couple’s
5-month-old daughter. Juliana-Ariel, was born last August
--the same day the book went to press!
Mere coincidence? Scarfone thinks
not.
"I had asked God to bless my marriage" he
said. "it isn't about money with me anymore, or how many big
cars I have. Love has come into my house so tremendously, God
has satisfied my needs!"
TOP
ATLANTA JOURNAL
CONSTITUTION1997
Fanning the deck: Author's `House
of Cards' tells of troubled past
Tattoos now cover the places where Rocky Scarfone shot
heroin at age 13.
Reading from his forthcoming
autobiography, "House of Cards: The Curse of Alphonso,"
Scarfone's voice creeps from a slow crawl as he describes the
needle slowly puncturing his skin to the rapid mumblings of an
auctioneer as he tells of the drug coursing through his veins.
Out of breath at the end of describing the high, he
inhales slowly and looks at his 5-month-old daughter, Juliana,
before saying, "I accomplished the goals I accomplished with
this background. Kids today can do the same."
Rocky's
accomplishments are numerous. A master goldsmith, amateur
botanist, mechanic and award-winning writer, he has given up
his old life in hopes of saving kids from the streets. His
first step: chronicling his own misadventures.
"The
book was written as an expression of my life," Scarfone said.
What a life it is.
Scarfone lives in
Lawrenceville with his new baby, his wife, Denise,
stepdaughter Brittney, an iguana, various bonsai trees and a
pit bull named Rock Crusher, whose relentless bark is stopped
abruptly by a mere "Hey, yo" from Rocky.
His modest
home is surrounded by a towering chain link fence. Cameras
watch guests in his office as they peruse framed letters of
commendation from President Clinton, Pat Robertson, Sylvester
Stallone and other famous people.
Scarfone plans to
use the proceeds from his book, which he has financed himself
rather than sign a restrictive contract (two he rejected are
hanging on his wall) to fund The Lighthouse Sanctuary For
Youth Foundation. The cornerstone of the foundation is to be a
safe house downtown for troubled youth.
But the tale
told in his book began long before Scarfone ever made it to
the Peach State.
Scarfone was born with club feet and
used braces until age 7.
A year later, he says, his
father was executed by the mob --- as were four generations of
Scarfone fathers before him, leaving no one to support the
family.
Scarfone dropped out of school in fifth grade
and, at 11, decided to hit the road.
Taking $40 from
his mother and leaving a note saying he'd be back when he was
either rich or famous, he set out across the country. Along
the way, he lived with American Indians in New Mexico and
hippies in San Francisco.
He slept under bridges and
ate ketchup when money was thin.
At 11, he returned to
the Bronx. His welcome back came in the form of a group of
social workers who had him confined to a mental hospital.
Three months later, he says, he escaped.
Scarfone's
book ends at his 16th birthday. He's already written a sequel.
Scarfone responds harshly when asked whether his book
glamorizes street life, saying every story ends with a
message, and what may at first glance seem like glamour ends
in hard reality and cold fact.
What did he learn from
the mob? "The mob means nothing but jail, " he said. "You know
what it meant for my father? It meant they put a plastic bag
over his head."
While writing the book, Scarfone said,
he infiltrated an infamous crime family's operations in
Atlanta in order to understand his family' s way of life.
He credits God with protecting him and allowing him to
be the first Scarfone father to survive.
Scarfone said
at every important turn in his life, someone was there to help
him make choices. While he sometimes ignored their advice,
Scarfonesaid, he wants to be there to do the same for kids
today.
"I want to teach kids to take a goal and make
it theirs," he said. Gesturing toward his baby daughter, he
exclaimed, "Because this is what this world is all about."
Copyright 1997, The Atlanta Journal and Constitution,
All rights reserved.
TOP
New book features county
writers Short stories by six Gwinnett
County residents are included in a new book titled "O
Georgia!" Published by Humpus Bumpus Books, the anthology
also includes essays, children's stories and seven poems by
Georgia writers. Judges, including author Don Shadburn and
several North Georgia college professors....
R.J. "Rocky" Scarfone of
Lawrenceville,Scarfone's entry, "ABonding Among Oaken Men," is
an excerpt from his novel "House ofCards: Father Figure and
the Oath of Alphonso." Copyright 1996, The Atlanta Journal
and Constitution, All rights reserved.
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